Tour Operators & Local Guides

Tour Operators

Club Pareo

This Japanese operation specializes in SCUBA diving and has some very experienced staff, but caters primarily to Japanese tourists. Staff may not be very comfortable communicating in English with non-Japanese customers. Contact the club for details.

Nihco Surf Camp / NIHCO Marine Park

Nihco Surf at NIHCO Marine Park focuses mostly on surfing expeditions, but also rents kayaks to guests, and runs trips to Ahnd Atoll. Contact Wilbur Walter for details.

Pohnpei Surf and Dive Club (PSC)

Pohnpei Surf and Dive Club’s specialty is obvious, but in addition to surfing and diving, the club has jetskis, stand-up paddleboards and a great fleet of reliable boats. They offer tours to Nan Madol ruins by car or boat, waterfalls, island hikes, snorkeling or dive trips at the best locations for that day based on weather, tides and season( like Manta RoadAhnd Atoll and Pakin Atoll). Rental dive, snorkel or surf gear are also available for rent at the location. The Pohnpei Surf and Dive Club is the longest running tour operation in Pohnpei conveniently operating from Mangrove Bay Hotel. They do free hotel pickups if you are joining a tour.

You can also check out Pohnpei Surf and Dive Club’s reviews on Tripadvisor HERE.

Seabreeze Hotel / Paradise Tour Service

Seabreeze Hotel has its own small tour service which can arrange a few different trips. Contact the hotel for details.

Yvonne’s Hotel

Yvonne’s is just starting to get into the touring business and can arrange a limited number of trips to well-known sites, such as Nan Madol and some of the popular waterfalls around the island. Contact the hotel for details.

For information on reliable tour guides it is best to contact a tour operation (such as Pohnpei Surf Club) in order to get the best person for the specific activity you would like to do, whether it is a trek up into the mountains, a trip to the Nan Madol ruins, or something completely different.

The Basics >> Guides & Tour Operators

Photography Considerations & Tips

Equatorial Blues

The Ecliptic and the Equator

Pohnpei lies near the equator. Because the sun’s ecliptic — the path it appears to follow around the earth (yes, we know Earth actually orbits the sun) — is only marginally offset from the line of the equator, the angle of the sun is more vertical in relation to a point on the ground than it would be at higher latitudes. At noon it is nearly overhead, something that never happens north or south of the Tropic lines. As a result, the harsh, contrasty light that you find at mid-day (and that photographers usually try to avoid) is present for most of the daylight hours. In the open, you tend to get very, very dark shadows with little or no detail and very bright highlights. This happens, because when the sun is high, it has less atmospheric interference to cut through and isn’t scattered as much as it is when it is low on the horizon.
Overhead Mid-Day Light
Furthermore, because the sun is high in the sky from about 9 AM until 5 PM, that overhead light doesn’t illuminate the scene itself very well (see illustration at left). Think about when you hold a book out in front of you and try to read in a room with only overhead light. The light doesn’t hit the pages directly. Similarly, the light on Pohnpei throughout most of the day falls on the tops of trees and mountains and people’s heads rather than the part we see — their leaves and slopes and faces. This means dark landscapes and foregrounds in contrast to very bright skies. It’s nearly impossible to balance that out without some post production work. The light during most of the day also has a blueish tone to it, which is not often attractive unless you’re shooting the ocean or other subjects where you want blue to be emphasized.

HOW TO DEAL

1. Shoot on days where the sky is partly cloudy or completely overcast.
Overcast Light
Clouds act as nice diffusers, capturing harsh, directional, shortwave light and bouncing it all over the place. On cloudy or partly cloudy days, shadows will be less intense or non-existent because that diffusion is making the light come from every direction at once. This kind of light is great for outdoor portraits, street shooting, wildlife, birds, etc. It makes things look smooth and elegant. Luckily, clouds are very common on Pohnpei. Being one of the rainiest places on earth, you can expect some clouds in the sky at some point on most days — though the conditions can change constantly from hot and sunny to hot and cloudy to torrential rain and back again.

2. Shoot in the shade.

In the shade, directional light is absent and only the ambient light remains. This gives you a similar effect as above — smooth, even light without harsh contrasts. If you’re in the forest under a heavy canopy of leaves, you can get incredible shots even on hot, clear days, but watch out for the little dappled spots of light; they will be way too bright. If you’re taking pictures of people outdoors, look for people who are sitting under trees or hut roofs.

3. Use fill flash.
No Fill Flash / With Fill Flash
Flash is something that a lot of aspiring photographers and almost all amateurs seem to be afraid of, because when you do flash wrong, you get very ugly results — washed out features, a flat and expressionless look, harsh shadows behind a subject, etc. When flash is done right, however, the results can be magic. It allows you to expose the bright parts of a scene (like the sky) properly and keep your subject from going too dark. Some of the most beloved Nat Geo photographers use flash almost constantly, but you’d never know it from their pictures. Here are some keys to using flash effectively. Image credit: www.picture-power.com

Dial down the power of your flash.

If you have a digital SLR or even just a compact camera with an on-camera flash, you can control the power of that flash by entering the camera menu and dialing it down 2/3 of a stop or more. Consult your camera’s manual. This will help balance the light added by your flash with the ambient light. If done right, they will blend in a pleasant and inconspicuous way. With fill flash, the idea is merely to lighten the shadows so that they’re about a third darker than the highlights. You still want some contrast–just not as much as you’re going to get without some artificial light.

Get your flash off-camera and position it at an angle to your subject.

Flash position
Straight-on frontal lighting almost never looks good (although, strangely, it’s a bit of a fad in fashion photography right now). As I mentioned before, it makes everything look flat. You may not have a flash that can detach from your camera, but if you do, you’ll want to be using it off the camera at all times. This means the flash communicates with the camera through a TTL cord or a wireless receiver. You hold it in one hand to the side at about a 45 degree angle to your subject and shoot with the other hand. The angled light emphasizes contour and texture, making the subject look three dimensional. It takes a bit of practice. As before, you’ll want to go into your flash menu and dial down the power so you aren’t wiping out the shadows, but merely softening them. Experimentation is essential.

Use colored gels.

Flash gel set
The color of the light a flash produces is about equal to sunlight during the middle of the day; it’s blueish-white. If you’re shooting during the middle of the day and just filling in the shadows a bit, your flash should blend well without a gel (a colored piece of plastic that goes over the flash head). If you’re shooting in the late evening when the colors are more toward orange and red, you’ll need to filter your flash to match those colors. Most camera stores and companies online sell huge packs of gels of many colors. They’re cheap. Invest in a set.

Keep your subject away from the background.

If you are photographing a person standing in front of a wall, your flash is going to create a shadow behind the person — especially if the flash is too strong for the ambient light. Avoid this by dialing down the flash power and keeping subjects far enough away from the background that the light of the flash won’t be sufficient to create a shadow.

4. Shoot early in the morning.
Early morning light
For the first hour or so after sunrise, the sun is low on the horizon and its light strikes things in your scene from a low angle, illuminating them fully. It also has a warmer tone to it, which makes colors look vibrant and inviting. With Pohnpei so close to the equator, however, this period doesn’t last long on the best of days. Getting the good light means getting up before sunrise and planning out where you’re going to go beforehand so you can be in position when stuff happens. In town, not much may be stirring this early, but out on the water or up on the hills, things are beginning to wake up and come alive. This is the stuff you want to focus on — fishermen going out, people throwing nets, birds taking off, etc. If the light is great, just the landscape itself will look incredible . . . but always have a clear subject.

5. Shoot late in the afternoon.
Late evening light
As in the morning, when the sun is starting to go down, it’s low on the horizon and does a great job of lighting a scene. It’s even warmer toned at this time of day than in the morning because most of the short-wave blue light is so scattered by the layers of atmosphere the light has to pass through, that you end up with more long-wave colors — oranges and reds. Again, the time is short. In a place at higher latitudes you might have an hour or more of “golden light.” On Pohnpei, you can expect fifteen to twenty minutes at most, and that only if you’re lucky enough to get a clear horizon. On most days, clouds roll in during that last hour of light and block out the sunlight, preventing the “golden hour” from coming at all. The only way to score is just to get out there every evening and hope for the best. Sunsets can be phenomenal on Pohnpei, but good ones are surprisingly rare for the same reason — those late afternoon clouds on the horizon block the light. The best sunsets tend to happen after really hot clear days or when the sky clears in the evening after a heavy rain. It’s difficult to predict. Be ready and be quick. The sun sets very quickly in the tropics. Twilight does not linger.

6. Shoot in the rain.

Instead of trying to fight those blue tones, embrace them. Get out there in the rain and shoot that cool rainy light and people in it. Find some eaves to stand under and shoot people splashing around in the deluge that Pohnpei is famous for.

Green & Blue Are Everywhere

Too Much Green and Blue
The first thing you’ll probably notice when arriving on Pohnpei — especially if you’re from a more arid climate — is how green the island is. Everything is green. This will excite you. You’ll want to take tons of pictures of all that green. You’ll also look at the ocean and the sky and think “Whoa. THAT is BLUE.” Again, you’ll be drawn to that blue. But if that’s all you do — take pictures of the forests, hillsides, ocean, and sky — when you look back at your images later on, you might come to the conclusion that they are, as a whole, a bit boring. Maybe you won’t realize why. Here’s why: everything is green and blue! Our eyes like to see variation in color. We like to see contrasts of different bright colors — reds on greens, yellows on blues and so on.

HOW TO DEAL

Look for Warm Colors
1. The other colors are rarer, but they are out there.

Pohnpei is a very colorful place (especially Pohnpei’s people), so we were exaggerating a bit back there when we said everything is green and blue. There are other bright colors, but you have to search for them. Look for reds, oranges, and yellows to balance out those cool tones. Good places to look–flowers, local skirts and dresses, birds, colorful houses, even blood (think feasts and slaughtered pigs).

Look for Warm Colors
2. Look for shots with something red, orange, or yellow in them.

By all means photograph those vivid blues and greens that only Pohnpei can deliver, but try to find ways to include other colors in those scenes. Look for a person with a red shirt. Look for a yellow wall. Look for a purple crab. Look for a kid on the beach with an orange pail. Get those things in your shots and you’ll be much happier later on with what you’ve produced.

People are Shy

In some places, people can be a bit hostile toward cameras. Pohnpei is not one of those places. People are warm and inclusive. You will probably never be told not to take a photo. That said, locals are somewhat self-conscious, by and large. So, while they may not tell you not to take their picture, they may very well start giggling or looking away or just generally not acting normal.

HOW TO DEAL

1. Take the time to make some friends.

The best bet — as in any people photography — is to be friendly and spend a little time with the people you want to photograph. Let them (and yourself) get comfortable. Keep shooting and keep being friendly. Ask questions at the beginning, be curious and open, engage. Once people aren’t paying much attention or running for cover anymore, you can really start to shoot in earnest and catch those candid moments.

2. Look for busy people.

Busy people focus on their tasks and ignore other things. If you want to get really nice candid shots, look for situations where people are occupied doing something complicated or important. They won’t even notice you.

3. Learn a little Pohnpeian.

This is a way in for any culture. Luckily, the basics of Pohnpeian are relatively easy to learn. The sounds are consistent and the grammar is simple. Even if you get it wrong, people will applaud your effort and all the laughing will lighten the mood.

Wet, Wetter, Wettest

Pohnpei is one of the wettest places on earth. It’s always humid, and much of the time it’s raining. Cameras hate water. Water and humidity makes them want to break, freeze up, and grow mold.

HOW TO DEAL

1. Protect your gear.

Keep everything as dry as possible. If you’re shooting in rain, use an umbrella or put your camera inside a plastic bag. If you’re in a boat, be especially careful of sea-spray. Ocean water is highly corrosive. Get a little on your gear and there will be problems later.
Silica Gel
2. Wipe everything.

After visiting the ocean, your gear should always be wiped carefully with a damp cloth to remove all traces of salt.

3. Store everything in an airtight container with desiccant.
Ice Chest
There are lots of expensive cases that work fine, but you don’t need to spend the cash. Plastic ice chests are cheap, work great, and can be used as luggage, too. Buy some industrial size boxes of silica gel online and store all your gear with it in your ice chest when you aren’t out and about. Reset the silica gel in an oven when it becomes saturated.

4. Watch contrasts in temperature and humidity.

Avoid taking your cameras and lenses from a cold, air-conditioned space outside and back again. That sudden change in humidity and temperature will cause condensation to form inside your equipment. Condensation is liquid water. You do NOT want that inside your camera or lens element. One option is to put your gear in a Ziploc bag before you go indoors. After it has been sitting in the air-conditioned temp for a bit, the air in the bag should be about the same temp as outside the bag, and it should be safe to take the gear out.

Have any other Pohnpei-specific tips you’d like to share? We’d love to hear them. Shoot us an email at stepoutside@pohnpei-adventure.com.

Electricity

Plug Types

Voltage & Plug Type

The FSM uses a 110-volt power system and dual flat pin outlets (grounded or ungrounded) like the United States and Japan. No transformers or plug adapters are available on the island, so visitors coming from anywhere other than the U.S. and Japan are advised to bring their own.

Power Service

Pohnpei’s electricity comes from the Pohnpei Utility Company (PUC), a strange public-private entity that has proven itself to be wholly inept at providing reliable power to the island’s residents. Though there has been talk of research into alternative sources of power, currently 100% of the electricity produced by PUC comes from diesel-burning generators, which regularly break down.

Cash Power

All electricity on the island is provided on a pre-paid basis through something called Cash Power. Residents and business owners purchase units of power from PUC, which then credits their meters. If you end up staying in a house, rather than a hotel room, you’ll have to buy your own cash power. Cash power can be purchased at the PUC cash power drive-thru located across from the road from Lit Palm (bring your meter number or know the name under which the meter is registered). Cash power can also be purchased online through PUC’s website (click here to go straight to the online payment page). You can also buy cash power cards in $5 denominations at most stores around Kolonia. PRD Drive-Thru on Main Street is a good place to go for late-night purchases.

The Basics >> Electricity

Getting Around

Rental Car Companies

Some of the hotels on Pohnpei have small car rental services for guests (7 Stars Inn, Ocean View Plaza Hotel (West Wing), Island Palms Hotel, Seabreeze, Yvonne’s Hotel). The important word here is small. Expect a very limited selection of vehicles with moderate up-keep. There is also a growing number of companies that specialize in car rental. For rental rates use contact info listed under each rental company.

G & J Car Rental

G & J offers SUVs, flatbeds (regular size), and flatbed mini-trucks.

H & E Car Rental

H & E offers pick-ups and flatbeds (regular size).

  • +691.320.2413
  • 8AM-5PM (Mon-Sat)

Kaselehlie Car Rental

Kaselehlie offers Sedans, SUVs, pick-up trucks , vans, flatbeds (regular size).

  • +691.320.4555
  • 9AM-3PM(Mon-Sat)

Paradise Car Rental

Paradise offers SUVs for rent. They are open 24/7.

  • +691.320.7978 / 7049
  • Open 24/7

Sunset View Car Rental

Sunset View Car Rental offers Sedans, SUVs, and Flatbeds for rent. They even have a website where you can make a reservation.

Rules of the Road

The rules are not all that different from any developed country. The reality is another matter; enforcement is minimal. There is no driver education, and many people begin operating vehicles without having taken tests of any kind. The concept of right-of-way is poorly understood, and passing frequently occurs where it is unsafe. Driving under the influence of alcohol and/or sakau (kava) is rampant, especially at night on the weekends. Though speed limits are usually not more than 24 kph (15 mph) around most of the island, a lot of people drive twice or three times that fast (especially taxis) and zip around the blind turns without care. Most of the Circle Island Road is paved now, but that doesn’t mean it’s in good condition everywhere; potholes are a fact of life and rain is ever-present. Additionally, while people drive on the right side of the road in the FSM, the majority of the cars on Pohnpei are second-hand imports from Japan with steering wheels on the left. Drivers in these vehicles have limited visibility, increasing the odds of accidents.

All this is simply to say that one must drive defensively and make no assumptions about what other drivers will or will not do. Drive slow and be aware at all times for children or animals running into the road.

Taxi Service

Taxi services on Pohnpei are as numerous as raindrops. New ones are constantly appearing while others vanish. All companies operate on a flat-fare basis and only accept cash. Because local taxis don’t use meters, and the fare isn’t directly proportional to the distance, Pohnpei’s taxi drivers have to hustle to make any money by the end of the day. They tend to drive very fast and very recklessly, and you can expect them to stop many times before they get to your destination in an effort to cram as many additional passengers as possible into their vehicle. Some of the drivers are super sweet. Others are, without a doubt, deranged. Also, don’t be surprised if your driver isn’t wearing a shirt or if he periodically opens the door, while speeding along, to spit his betel nut juice on the roadway. Seriously.

Taxis can be requested by phone or waved down on the road. If doing the former, we recommend that you have someone at your hotel do the calling. The taxi company dispatchers are often difficult for foreigners to communicate with and are more likely to get the correct information (and send a taxi faster) if a local person speaks with them. Also good idea would be to ask a local person how much the fare should roughly be so that the taxi driver does not try to hustle extra money from you.

Taxis can take you anywhere, but they’re definitely not tour guides.

Bicycling Around

If you can get your hands on a good mountain bike, exploring on two wheels is not a bad option. There are, however, a number of things to consider. For details, visit our page on Biking.

Walking

Outside of town, it’s normal to see local people walking along the road from place to place, but they don’t do it because they want to, and most Pohnpeians are baffled when they encounter a foreigner who chooses to walk when other options are available. Never the less, the island is not a bad place for pedestrians. You just have to be doubly conscious of traffic on the roads, accept that the Western concept of “right-of-way” means next to nothing to most people, be wary of dogs, and always be prepared for torrential rains. Kolonia has sidewalks along most of its major streets, but they are in bad condition and are often very slippery. Watch for holes and loose concrete slabs unless you want to end up hurting yourself or falling in a stream of sewer water.

Hiring Boats

The easiest way to hire a boat for a group is to approach an operator like Pohnpei Surf Club. Tour operators usually have boats going out with groups, for more affordable rates it’s better to book in groups and split the cost rather than booking trips by yourself.

The Basics >> Getting Around

Money Matters

Currency

The FSM uses the U.S. dollar ($US) exclusively, and the two local banks on the island — Bank of Guam and Bank of FSM — do not handle foreign currency at all. Thus, any currency brought to Pohnpei that is not U.S. dollars will be useless for the duration of the trip.

Traveler’s Checks: Don’t Bother

Traveler’s checks, though perhaps useful for throwing at people in the process of trying to rob you (we can’t say we’ve personally experienced this), are mostly useless pieces of paper on Pohnpei. Virtually no one, including the banks, will cash them.

Credit & Debit Cards

Theoretically, if your debit card carries the VISA logo, it should work in all four ATMs on Pohnpei (two at the Bank of Guam branch in Nett, one inside FSM Telecom, and one at the Bank of FSM branch across from Palm Terrace Store. However, things don’t always go smoothly. Make sure you notify your bank prior to leaving on your trip and let them know where you will be using the card to prevent holds. ATMs occasionally go down, too, though not usually all of them at the same time. It’s best to have a little extra cash on hand at all times in case something unforeseen occurs.

Major credit cards (VISA / Mastercard) are accepted at the large stores. Smaller businesses take cash only. Expecting private vendors to have something like Square to swipe your card? Forget about it. Pohnpei is light-years behind when it comes to technology and — we’re going to say this over and over — that’s part of its charm . . . at least for visitors.

Drinking Water

On Tap

The Pohnpei Utility Company (PUC) provides the tap water in town, which comes from the Nanipil River dam at the foot of the mountains south of Kolonia. The tap water is filtered and chlorinated, supposedly rendering it safe to drink, but it often turns muddy after heavy rains when sediment washes into the rivers upstream. Travelers would be wise to stick to purified water. Luckily, Pohnpei has multiple great companies that provide just that at very affordable prices.

Pohnpei Water Company

Pohnpei Water Company (PWC) is located just beyond Panuelo’s Service Station and produces purified drinking water using an industrial filtering system. They sell 5-gallon jugs; washing and refill costs are very reasonable. They’ll deliver for a small fee.

  • 8AM-5:30PM (Mon-Sat)
  • +691.320.2601

Drops of Life

Drops of Life is another water supplier based at the PAMI Building below the Japanese Embassy. Like PWC, they use an industrial purifier and sell water in 5-gallon jugs, they also deliver for a small fee.

  • 8AM-7PM (Mon-Sat); 1-6PM (Sun)
  • +691.320.8719

Rain Water

A water company located at Hideout on the southwestern end of the Dolonier loop, across from the Pics Track and Field. They too use an industrial purifier and produce bottles of water by the cases. Cases come in two types: 500 ml bottles and 1L bottles. They also do refills for 5 gallon water jugs or any other water containers.

  • 8AM-5PM (Mon-Sat)
  • +691.320.2186 / +691.920.7412 (Mobile number only for orders outside of business hours.)

Island Spring Water Company

Island Spring Water Company is a subsidiary of the INS conglomerate run by the Nakasone family. It is located along Nantuelek Road, across the street from the Mid-Town Tire Shop and behind Nihco Store (Mabushi). Like the other water companies they sell 5 gallon jugs which can be refilled and do deliveries. They also sell bottled water in 500ml and 1 L packs. You can find their bottles in many small stores.

The Basics >> Guides & Water

An Introduction to Pohnpei

Pohnpei, the Ultimate Adventurer’s Paradise

 title=Imagine an island that still retains its wildness — a place of rugged, breathtaking beauty, vibrant traditional culture, unpaved remoteness, and mystery. Imagine a landscape so green that it threatens to burn a hole in your retina. Picture being the only snorkeler on a pristine reef, surfing one of the world’s most celebrated waves, diving in a place most divers have never dreamed of, climbing misting mountain peaks, exploring a prehistoric megalithic city, or trekking through lush rainforests. This, in a nutshell, is Pohnpei.

But, Where the Heck is It?

The short answer? 4,828 kilometers (3,000 miles) southwest of Hawaii and 3,700 kilometers (2,300 miles) northeast of Australia. Pohnpei is the largest and highest island in the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), a far-flung oceanic nation with some 600 islands spread across a vast section of the western Pacific between Hawaii and the U.S. Territory of Guam. The FSM is one of the most culturally diverse areas in the Pacific with more than twenty distinct groups and as many unique languages. The country is divided into four states (from east to west) — Kosrae, Pohnpei, Chuuk, and Yap. The capital of the FSM is located at Palikir on the west side of Pohnpei Island. In addition to the main island, Pohnpei State also includes four inhabited Micronesian atolls, two distant Polynesian outliers, two uninhabited atolls, and a submerged atoll.

They Don’t Call It the Garden Isle for Nothing

Roughly 22.5 kilometers (14 miles) in diameter, Pohnpei Island is the peak of a 5 million-year-old extinct shield volcano that has subsided over its lifetime. Some say it bears a resemblance to Bora Bora minus the unchecked development. Others liken it to something out of a Robert Louis Stevenson novel. Both would be correct. The place is rugged and brilliant green with a dense rainforested interior and mountains as high as 780 meters (2,600 feet). With 825 centimeters (325 inches) of rain a year in the interior, Pohnpei ranks as the seventh rainiest location on Earth. All that water adds up to more than 40 watercourses, scores of scenic waterfalls, and some of the largest areas of intact upland rainforest in the Pacific.

Pohnpei offers divers and snorkelers a mostly unexplored marine wonderland

A Marine Wonderland

Pohnpei’s coasts are entirely encircled by shadowy mangrove forests that are more than 3 kilometers (2 miles) wide in places and provide a maze of narrow, tunnel-like channels for kayaking, canoeing, or stand-up paddleboarding (SUP) enthusiasts. This environment is a serene domain of birds and other creatures. A half to one and a half kilometers further out, a barrier reef curves around 70% of the island, forming a large, placid lagoon with passages going out into the open ocean — prime spots for surfing, snorkeling, and SCUBA diving. Small volcanic islands are scattered about within the lagoon and coralline islands with sandy beaches perch along the reef itself, calling to campers and beach-bums.

In short, there’s a little bit here for everyone . . .

Nett & Western U GPS Data

Downloadable GPS Data Files

The following files contain all the packaged GPS data for each of the featured locations in Greater Nett & Western U.

Three file types are provided. KMZ and KML files are compatible with Google Earth. KML is compatible with Google Maps. GPX files can be imported into ArcGIS (a professional mapping application) and some hand-held GPS devices.

NOTE: All files are free to the public and can be used for any purpose without permission.

Marine Parks in Awak Pah (2015)

Dolen Eirike (2015)

Dolen Nahnsapwe (2015)

Lou Rahn Cave & Waterfall (2015)

Nan Kiepw & Na Malek Cave (2015)

Nan Koropwung Cliff, Waterfall & Caverns (2015)

Dolen Nett / Pohnlehr (2015)

Nanipil Vicinity (2015)

These files include Liduduhniap, Sengnaip, Likei, Pahn Pwet, and Nan Kiepw waterfalls, the Nanipil Bird Walk, the Swimming Pond, and another popular swimming hole in the area.

Coordinates

The following coordinates correspond with sites featured on the Greater Nett & Western u Eco-Adventure Map Guide. It is our dream to eventually create a Pohnpei GPS app that could be uploaded to smartphones and other devices, but for now, these points of interest can be entered manually in a hand-held GPS device as needed.

NOTE: All GPS devices have a margin of error. That margin increases with interference — when there is a thick canopy of trees, during bad weather, or when mountains obstruct the satellite link. The geosynchronous satellites employed when navigating on Pohnpei are located low on the southwestern horizon, such that maintaining a strong connection while hiking on the northeast side of a given mountain range can be difficult. Coordinates on the northeastern slopes of mountains are less accurate than in other locations.

Awak Marine Parks

Awak Pah MP Entrance —- 6.965910° 158.250758°
Pein Ahi Entrance —- 6.966711° 158.251138°
Paieke Entrance —- 6.969853° 158.256294°
Awak Pah MP Dock —- 6.966470° 158.248785°
Pein Ahi Fish Pond —- 6.967572° 158.249929°

Dolen Eirike

Relio Lengsi’s Residence —- 6.926688° 158.227910°
Dolen Eirike Trailhead —- 6.919570° 158.227397°
Sakau Plantation —- 6.917106° 158.227410°
Japanese Trench Network —- 6.915589° 158.230300°
Dolen Eirike Summit —- 6.915140° 158.231599°
Dol Rakied Summit —- 6.906234° 158.237645°

Dolen Nahnsapwe

Dolen Nahnsapwe Trailhead – Nett Approach —- 6.927169° 158.246675°
Dolen Nahnsapwe Trailhead – U Approach —- 6.918897° 158.270844°
Dolen Nahnsapwe Summit —- 6.909546° 158.260936°
Dolen Nahnsapwe Turn-Off from Lou Rahn Trail —- 6.923336° 158.249283°

Lou Rahn

Lou Rahn Trailhead —- 6.927169° 158.246675°
Lou Rahn Cave & Waterfall —- 6.918551° 158.253955°

Nan Kiepw & Na Malek

Nan Kiepw / Na Malek / Nahnalaud Nett Trailhead —- 6.918179° 158.214601°
Stream Crossing —- 6.917458° 158.215238°
Nahnalaud Turn-Off from Nan Kiepw Trail —- 6.910792° 158.217769°
Last House along trail —- 6.900363° 158.214973°
Na Malek Loop Turn-Off from Nan Kiepw Trail —- 6.897523° 158.213266°
Na Malek Loop Turn-Off from Nan Kiepw Trail —- 6.895756° 158.213144°
Na Malek Cave —- 6.895878° 158.211765°
Kiepw Waterfall —- 6.889668° 158.211740°
Nan Kiepw Overhang & Campsite —- 6.889639° 158.211035°

Nan Koropwung

Nan Koropwung Trailhead —- 6.925729° 158.254909°
Cliff & Waterfall —- 6.927155° 158.259679°
Cave 1 —- 6.927513° 158.259859°
Cave 2 —- 6.927877° 158.259142°
Cave 3 —- 6.927884° 158.259038°

Dolen Nett / Pohnlehr

Dolen Nett Trailhead 1 —- 6.968282° 158.230457°
Dolen Nett Trailhead 2 —- 6.965640° 158.234757°
Dolen Nett Trailhead 3 —- 6.959650° 158.225124°
Dolen Nett Trailhead 4 —- 6.969614° 158.228438°
Japanese Tunnel Entrance —- 6.965840° 158.228329°
Yam Plantation —- 6.965248° 158.228609°
Japanese Defensive Position —- 6.964007° 158.229053°
Japanese Trench Network —- 6.963868° 158.229051°
Japanese Trench Network —- 6.963073° 158.229706°
Japanese Trench Network —- 6.963105° 158.229949°
Japanese Trench Network —- 6.963125° 158.230125°
Japanese Trench Network —- 6.963025° 158.230332°
Pandanus Grove —- 6.961883° 158.230662°
Coconut Palm Grove —- 6.961188° 158.231013°
80 mm Field Gun —- 6.958862° 158.233030°
Rusted Barrels —- 6.958814° 158.233064°
80 mm Gun in Bunker —- 6.958838° 158.233535°
Machinegun Bunker —- 6.958741° 158.233545°
Bunker —- 6.958765° 158.233415°
Pohnlehr Summit —- 6.958226° 158.233346°
Japanese Mobile Radar Array —- 6.958767° 158.232402°

Sengnaip Waterfalls

Trailhead —- 6.920677° 158.204421°
Route Intersection —- 6.920647° 158.201060°
Sengnaip Cave —- 6.917556° 158.200460°
Sengnaip Waterfalls —- 6.917522° 158.200383°

Likei & Pahn Pwet Waterfalls

Trailhead —- 6.920677° 158.204421°
Route Intersection —- 6.920647° 158.201060°
Stream Crossing —- 6.919559° 158.198878°
Log Crossing —- 6.916577° 158.198932°
Route Intersection —- 6.916577° 158.198932°
Route Intersection —- 6.914373° 158.199648°
Route Intersection —- 6.904178° 158.192649°
Route Intersection —- 6.904178° 158.192649°
Likei Waterfall —- 6.903375° 158.189810°
Pahn Pwet Waterfall —- 6.902343° 158.192313°

Nan Kiepw Waterfall

Trailhead —- 6.919873° 158.206230°
Route Intersection —- 6.914373° 158.199648°
Nan Kiepw Waterfall —- 6.897512° 158.206958°

Liduduhniap Waterfalls

Trailhead —- 6.919915° 158.206706°
Upper Pool —- 6.918893° 158.206592°
Upper Falls —- 6.918891° 158.206557°
Lower Pool —- 6.918564° 158.206676°
Lower Falls —- 6.918695° 158.206572°

Nanipil Vicinity

Nanipil Bird Walk Trailhead —- 6.920677° 158.204421°
Nanipil Bird Walk Trail End —- 6.919559° 158.198878°
Hydroelectric Building —- 6.918222° 158.214670°
Japanese Pump Station —- 6.918404° 158.214481°
Swimming Pond Trailhead —- 6.922461° 158.215089°
Swimming Pond —- 6.922642° 158.215955°
Cable Bridge Swimming Hole —- 6.932656° 158.216346°

Downloads >> GPS Central >> Nett & Western U GPS Data

Mwudokolos Island

Mwudokolos is found a half-kilometer (0.33 mi) northeast of Metipw and easily accessed from the coral-dredged causeway/dock found there (ask at the nearest house for permission to launch if you’re paddling out). The privately owned, but uninhabited, island has prehistoric stone structures that date to the Nahnmwarki Period of Nan Madol (post-1700). Glass beads, sherds, and clay pipes have also been found there by archaeologists, suggesting that Mwudokolos was occupied by foreign traders in the late 1800s. There’s some nice swimming and snorkeling northeast of the island.

Pohnpei Adventures >> Islands >> Mwudokolos Island

Lepin Dau Island

This island is claimed by the same family as Dahu Reirei and has no true name, but as it lies adjacent to the primary channel every boat in the area uses to go from Areu and Ohwa to Madolenihmw Bay, it’s known by most people as Lepin Dau (or sometimes “Channel Island”). Lepin Dau is larger and higher than Dahu Reirei and has some welcoming tree-cover. The reef pass on the west side is a nice spot to snorkel at slack tide, but at other times, the current can be so strong that snorkelers and swimmers run a strong risk of being swept away. A better spot for snorkeling is in the blue holes around the southeast side — well out of the path of the current. Here you can find beautiful coral grottoes, schools of needlefish, barracuda, cuttlefish, trumpetfish, angelfish, and parrotfish, an odd seasnake (the latter are venomous, but so passive that they pose little danger to snorkelers), and from time to time even eagle rays and small green turtles.

  • To obtain permission for overnight stays or to arrange boat transport from Ninleu, call +691.924.2229.

Pohnpei Adventures >> Islands >> Lepin Dau Island

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